Transdermal deferoxamine prevents pressure-induced diabetic ulcers

Dominik Duscher(Stanford University), Evgenios Neofytou(Stanford University), Victor W. Wong(Johns Hopkins University), Zeshaan N. Maan(Stanford University), Robert C. Rennert(Stanford University), Mohammed Inayathullah(Stanford University), Michael Januszyk(Stanford University), Mélanie Rodrigues(Stanford University), Andrey V. Malkovskiy(Stanford University), Arnetha J. Whitmore(Stanford University), Graham G. Walmsley(Stanford University), Michael G. Galvez(Stanford University), Alexander J. Whittam(Stanford University), Michael Brownlee(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Jayakumar Rajadas(Stanford University), Geoffrey C. Gurtner(Stanford University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
December 22, 2014
Cited by 221Open Access
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Abstract

There is a high mortality in patients with diabetes and severe pressure ulcers. For example, chronic pressure sores of the heels often lead to limb loss in diabetic patients. A major factor underlying this is reduced neovascularization caused by impaired activity of the transcription factor hypoxia inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF-1α). In diabetes, HIF-1α function is compromised by a high glucose-induced and reactive oxygen species-mediated modification of its coactivator p300, leading to impaired HIF-1α transactivation. We examined whether local enhancement of HIF-1α activity would improve diabetic wound healing and minimize the severity of diabetic ulcers. To improve HIF-1α activity we designed a transdermal drug delivery system (TDDS) containing the FDA-approved small molecule deferoxamine (DFO), an iron chelator that increases HIF-1α transactivation in diabetes by preventing iron-catalyzed reactive oxygen stress. Applying this TDDS to a pressure-induced ulcer model in diabetic mice, we found that transdermal delivery of DFO significantly improved wound healing. Unexpectedly, prophylactic application of this transdermal delivery system also prevented diabetic ulcer formation. DFO-treated wounds demonstrated increased collagen density, improved neovascularization, and reduction of free radical formation, leading to decreased cell death. These findings suggest that transdermal delivery of DFO provides a targeted means to both prevent ulcer formation and accelerate diabetic wound healing with the potential for rapid clinical translation.


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